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Chicago examiner Chicago may 30 1910 14 pages monday registered la c is i'atent uslce monday vol viii no 137 a m pricf onf cfnt celivereg by canln 1 r_.i-.e uim r__i . i 30 can . a p j r mojrtk â– dr cook found in scotland going north for proofs preparing for trip to etah to . recover records cached there osbori declares to bring back eskimos insists he wiil face accusers with evidence ke alone reached the pole new y'i:;k may 29 the mystery of the whereabouts of dr frederick a cook was solved to-night he is in scotland pre paring for a trip to etah whence he plans to bring back his records of the discovery of the north pole and his instruments which are cached there he also intends to bring back the two eskimos who accompanied him on his dash to the pole and with them an interpreter in the person of the eskimo boy meue who recently returned to etah from new tori dr cook's objective point when he shall have recovered his records and instru ments will be copenhagen there he will ! submit his completed proofs to the scien tific body before whieli he appeared when he first returned from the far north after that he plans to return to new york to face his detractors and prove be yond doubt that he was not only the lirst but the only discoverer of the pole it is expected that he will reach copenhagen about octohec j and new york perhaps a month later oabon reveals plans the stanc-host supporter that dr cook has in new y'ork is captain bradley !_. os j lion of the arctic club of america nor man has been closer to tlie doctor sin-ce i the beginning of the now famous cook 1 peary controversy and he is one of the few ; men who has been in communication with the explorer since he disappeared ur cook is in great britain said cap tain osbon 1 cannot give his exact ad dress i firmly believe that he is noiv completing plans to start for etah to re cover his records and instruments i also believe that he will recover them and will take them straight to copenhagen the verdict of the university of copen hagen in dr cook's case was not proveur when he submits his records whieh will complete his proof that yerdict will un changed to proved beyond the shadow of a doubt i cannot tell how dr cook will go to etah because i don't know tliere are thiee ways open to him the first is by a whaling vessel from dundee scotland the second is by the danish government's trad ing ship from copenhagen this vessel goes only to upper navik and it is a long hard trip from there to etah if he can get the permission of ue danish government for the vessel to take him to etah that perhaps would lie the test way for him to l-o because on a danish vessel and under the auspices of the government there could be no suspicion attaching to the trip banker to pay expenses 1 think however that the third method i is tlie best there is a new york banker j a man of great wealth who stands ready j at any time to defray the expense of thel doctor's trip to etah this man is now in europe he is ready to put up the i money to charter a vessel and hi it out for the trip i have advised dr cook by letter not j â– to go for the records himself as to do so would give his enemies an opportunity to bay that he tampered with them after re covering them i want him to send a trustworthy committee to recover the rec . ords and instruments and to get the two eskimos this committee should go straight from etah to copenhagen and dr cook can meet them there if however he insists upon going in person he should take with hill scuuc men who will see that the rec ords are sealed as soon ns recovered and will be able to testify that they were not tampered with will leave in few weeks dr cook sliould leave foi etah within n few weeks i expect that he will arrive tliere about august 1 perhaps a little curlier and he should be back with the completed proofs before october l lie has been in great britain about six or seven weeks he was iu asuncion paraguay in the middle of march he weut from there to buenos ayres and sailed for southampton arriving tliere april 7 he has been in great britain ever since making his arrangements he knows all that has been going on not only has he been informed by letters fr.un new york but he has been supplied with newspaper clippings and is thorou < i ly posted no one is with him except his wife i am positive that early this fall dr cook will reappear with positive proof of his claims mme lina cavalieri lina cavalieri to go under knife in paris famous diva and fiancee of sheriff bob chanler is seriously 111 with appendicitis special gable to the examiner london may 2 a dispatch from paris says liua cavalieri who was about to leave paris for buenos ayres to fulfill an operatic engagement at a theater there is suffering from au attack of appendicitis and is unable to make the journey uutil after an operation has beeu performed mme cavalieri who is one of the world's famous singers a nd who has been in paris i jfor some time filling an engagement rg eently announced her jietrothal to former sheriff boh ( hni r . f new york her long deferred answer to his pr__>c__l to marry caused much comment when she accepted him by cable she later said she j would not marry in italy where there are no divorce laws though she further stated | she did not expect to and their use neces sary -'.__' w -â– â– - . â€¢ .-â– _ augustus n gage dead well known heal estate lawyer 111 bnt a few days augustus neander gage 57 years old pioneer resident of wilmette and a prom inent Chicago attorney died early yester day morning at his home 1210 greenwood avenue after a short illness mr gage was stricken while at his office tuesday thursday night he became worse and sat urday hope of his recovery was abandoned mr gage had been engaged iu the practice of law in ohicago for forty years he made a specialty of real estate law nnd handled many of the largest cases involv ing real estate deals in the loop district lie was one of the best known masons in the stale mr cage was lioru at gage's lake lake vouniy and studied law at washington d <".. coming to Chicago shortly after the flre he is survived by his widow antoinette gage und three sons lured p gage of new york city and henry n gage and frederick gage of wilmette hope for mann lake bill measure to prevent dumping oreilg luktn may be passed washington may 211 Chicago seems after all to be in a fair way to get the bill passed preventing the government from damping dredgings in the lake less than eight miles from shore senator burton wiio as a senate conferee favored the war oflice amendment requiring chi eago to construct bulkheads for govern ment use as well as for the use of the entire length of cook county Illinois and lake couuty indiana and also to pay for any increased cost of haul by the govern ment has gone into the matter very thor oughly he has not made up his mind yet hut seems to he of the opinion that gen eral marshall's proposition is an unfair demand hy the government and that it should not be granted and further that the mann bill should be passed just about as it left the house rain is aid to firemen downpour helps quench 250,001 blaze in doivntonn plttahurg pittsburg ph may 23 a drenching rnlustorm swept over pittsburg nt 8 o'clock to-ui^ut and gave great a.-siavance in nueii-hlnc n hre which for several hours had threatened the downtown part of the city tho loss ls estimated at tjil.o.ooa more thau thirty flremen were hurt seven ore in ho-piials but none will die the arc brake out lu a saloon next to the treat northern billiard hall the saloon was lestroyed together with several hun dred barrels of whisky about 10.000 mov ing picture iihii were destroyed in the billiard hall the hoffbtau liouse was also destroyed wilh us slock of whisky und several of the larger scores were o lire several i lines warship hushes to aid of u s troops fear expressed for american garrison on police duty at bluefields seizure is possible delicate situation may make strengthening of west coast necessary washington may j the dispatch of the prair.e a warship today _ rom | philadelphia to ihe scene of i _Â„<_. fighting ia nioaragta is a fur be demonstration of the in ten tion of the i'nited states to ti._l.ten its grasp on the affairs of the central american republic tiie i'i-.iivie will take from colon to biue flclds siboai i marines from the camps in l'aiiauia for the speedier dispatch of assistance to the aiuorii-.-in forces at bluefields haw ver 200 6f'aril , *_ will pro ceed at once from colon on '"'â– - ide ofi the isthmus to blucsclds ou the dubiiijlte commander ji'mer by sending one of his two vessels the dubuque to colon for emergency reinforcements shows that an acute and clangorous situation has arisen inland near bluefiems i . Â„ j"a precautionary measure i officially the buret of operations of the navy department says that the sudden departure of the prairie loaded to the limit with munitions of war and a fighting force of sailors is a precautionary measure there is no question that the uncovering of the correspondence between madriz and the niearaguan officials in this country to the case of the venus has created n wide hi each between madriz and the state de i partment a more important consideration w-bich ; had all to do wtih the hurry orders ofj the prairie is that the recent quarrel be ! tween this country and madrid made it ; not unlikely that fanatical followers of . madriz might endeavor to wreak ven ; geaiice ou comparatively a few i'nited states sailors or marines to whom is com mitted'the charge of maintaining the po lice and the authority of tb i'ni'.e states at bluefields and at greytown mjghi lgnore lj s flag the situation was inl is pregngttt who tragical possibilities the warfjy . between the factions is savage enough ajffl i_s style is not lacking in tiie suggestion that a j victorious madriz army so called entering ! bluefields might refuse to respect the united states flag and the guard of marines and sailors both 0f which represent lhe authority of the united states at this mo ment on niearaguan soil it was tlierefore the part of prudence to have on hand loo or 000 marines at bluefields or at least on board the prairie at colon subject to a hurry call from commander gilmer to the paducah at blueselds it is entirely probable that the uew gravity of things will demand precau tionary measures of equal strength and im mediate availability to be taken ou the west coast strengthen west coast the princeton was scheduled to leave corinto but the vicksburg will take her place the buffalo nnd the albany left the west coast some weeks ago but it is not improbable that they will return with their forces or that forces will be sent on any ships nt hand on the pacific all the dramatic swiftly moving events of the past three days prove that the policy adopted by the admiuistratioi pan lie epit omized as intervention occupation paci fication and retention liner on rocks in fog steamer fith 1.--00 km iv r ts for america saved frum disaster special cable to the examiner london may 29 as the russian steamer i.ilnanhi which ailed from open hagen may 24 for new vork with 1,200 em igrants was proceeding very slowly through fog on friday evening she struck rocks off old head point peiitlnnil firth between scotland and the orkney island the steamer held fast and many of the emi grants greatly alarmed fell on iheir knees nnd prayed fortunately the fog lifted and after wireless communication was es tablished with the warship bellona at lu vergordon and with copenhagen the en gines were reversed and the liner floated off the bulkheads kepr the water from hie maiu hold and the lituania ran safely to tynemouth where she will be repaired sen kean's seat in peril three ex-governors to oppose xew jersev stand-patter's re-election | trenton n j may 29 united j states senator lohn kean one of the j original stand-patters an organization | man through and through and n stanch i advocate of the aldrich-cancon regime in congress will be opposed by two and pos cibly by three of the former governors of his home state when he comes before the legislature for re-election next january and lt is not at all improbnble that he will be denied another term the former governors who nre avowed candidates for senator eean'a place are b ('. stokes of cumberland franklhi murphy of newark nnd john w griggs of i'ussnle nt one time attorney general of the nation the democrats favor president woodrow wil son of princeton university for the place crazed man slays his wife and priest st paul stock buyer just out of sanatarium kills with , out warning son sees mother shot v man surrenders to police is put in cell then asks are they dead st paul minn may 29 crazed from | brooding over the belief that his wife was intimate with father a j walsh a cath olic priest i 3 gibbons commission broker of south st paul shot and killed her to-night then taking his little boy with bim in a buggy drove to the home of the priest calling tlie priest to the door he shot and killed him gibbous theu sur rendered to the police gibbons has been in a sanitarium in minneapolis for several weeks because of excessive drinking he telephoned this wife i yesterday that he was going to leave to-day \ and asked her to come and accompauy i him home she went with a physician i they made the trip from minneapolis ou an interurban car at sooth st paul the physician left them and mr nnd mrs gibbons got in a buggy and drove home within fifteen minutes after their arrival gibbons entered the kitchen leveled a re volver at his wife and fired two shots into iier head son witnesses tragedy leaving tier prostrate on the floor he took bis little boy who had witnessed the tragedy climbed iflto-tb buggy and drove to the parish home t st a'agnvtise's church in south st paul he knocked on the door and the priest appeared an ex cited conversation ensued and before the priest could retreat gibbons again drew j his re olver and fired two shots into his head heath was instantaneous gibbons theu walked to the police station to an officer he said i've killed a catholic priest after gibbous had been locked in his cell and the jailer had gone he sat down on his cot and buried his head in his hands he fixed his eyes on the floor and was motionless when a reporter stepped to his side and told who he was gibbons re i marked ! i'm gladi you came these people in here are not the kind one wants to talk to when in trouble are they dbad he asks gibbons the reporter said why did you kill your wife nnd father walsh arc they dead he said ibe news seemed to daze him he sank back on his bed after a bit he said yes 1 remember nancy and i had a quarrel 1 asked her to tell me all-begged uer to tell me 5 suffer hours on lake exhausted woman and men rescued from crippled launch their engine disabled b.v beating waves four men and a woman spent three terrify ing hours yesterday afternoon eight miles out on the hike bailing for life until an other boat picked them up frank baciou talupie joseph cartwright john hof brauer james mcdermott and his flancee miss bessie noirot started out at noon in the gasoline launch nelly belonging to john hester a heavy sea arose crippling the engine after which the boat was beat helplessly by the waves all were nearly exhausted from desperate balling when the thomas ahern captain frank sobota com manding hove in sight as the rescuers i'me alongside hofbrnuer fell ln a dead faint miss noirot also was in a fainting conditiou mrs cleveland returns he-itches home vith children after eight mouths lu europe nkw yobk may 29 mrs grover cleveland with three daughters and one isou returned from an eight-month stay in europe to-day mrs cleveland looked o ttremely well her daughter esther now i about eighteen showed greater change than any of th children her stay in europe has made it plain she is no longer l child but a young woman frances grover marlon and klchard folsom also looked well ... we spent the winter in lausanne switzerland said mrs cleveland 1 wished to have the children well grounded in french nnd the best way to do that u to live among french people the pest ol their education will he continued ln this country j pinchot arrives home former forester llenches new vork on return from europe i.nkw yokk may 29 0n board the steamship arabic which arrived at quar antine t.-ui-ht and anchored there until to-morrow morning v is gifford pinchot foruvr chief ren-su f o the depnrtiueji <â– â€¢ agriculture who has beeu ou a visit to ' europe rushing street car injures aged man martin snooj.s suffers frac - tured skull and condition is serious another white-haired old man one of the many who in the last few months have met death and injuries from the speeding street cars on the streets of Chicago was struck by a car at clark and van buren streets last night the latest victim is in the county hospital wilh a fractured skull and many bruises and cuts martin snooks seventy-tive years old a watchman employed by armour & co was the victim of the rushing street car that is such a menace to the life and limb of the residents of Chicago the old man started across clark street at vau buren he became confused and n north-bound wentworth avenue ear was not stopped by the motorman in time to avert an acci dent . . snooks was rolled along the pavement for twenty feet or more his condition is serious mrs taft's father sinks president's wife speeds to bedside of veteran attorney cincinnati 0 may lm mrs william howard Taft wife of the president will reach cincinnati early to-morrow from rittsburg and will he taken immediately to the bedside of her sick father john w herron 82 years old veteran attorney of cincinnati it was reported late last week that mr herron was sinking slowly and the word was taken to the white house the president was so busy that he could not get away and mrs Taft wired back that she would come it was her intention to remain iu pittsburg uutil wednesday morning but yesterday she was tele raphed to come as quickly as possible mr herron has been so ill for several weeks that he has been unable to rise from his bed reaches for hat drowns john belch 900 ashland avenue was acci dentally drowned yesterday while lishing in the Chicago kiver in morton grove belch's hat wns blown off and when he reached for it lie lost his balance and fell into the waier curtiss flies from albany to new york races mile-a-minute train 137 miles by glenn h curtiss flying at height of 1,000 feet aercplanist breaks recorcts for sustained flight aver ages 54,78 mi.es an hour makes two landings for oil ancl fuel plunging of ma chine fails to daunt hirrij wife watches from car â– air currents at west point â€¢ come near sending the navigator into river pres j ' ence of mind saves him r new york may 20 c.leun h curtiss flew to-day in an aeroplane from albany to new york a dis tance of 137 miles in 1.2 minutes never betore had this trip been made by man in the air tho fl.ght of curtiss broke the world recot-l cr speed iu a long distance test i maintained an average of 5 1.78 tinies an hour and in spurts fre quently exceeded the rate of a mils a minute the story of his flight as told by the aviator himself is as when i awoke thie morning at 4 o'clock in the hotel tell eyck at albany i did not know whether or not i would try to fly down the hudson to new york city fbr days i had been waiting for propitious weather people had kept ask ing me when are you going to fly do you really intend to fly do you think you can make such a flight the strain of the air trip itself is as nothing compared with i;a preparation i was overjoyed when i began to receive reports from various points along the river that there was hardly a breeze blowing j and everything looked favorable for a flight if was not however until about 6 o'clock that we actually de cided to launch the ship jacob ten eyck the official starter looked the ground over and at 7:02 gave the signal the aeroplane took tho air easily and a minute after i had left van rennsselaer island 1 as sailing over the southern part of t he city of albany i have since been told that some of the river craft along tha water front of the captal gave me a rousing sendoff but 1 did not notice the whistling at the time a man in an aeroplane cannot hear much of the noises of the world be low him the roar of his engines almost deafening him after a time his ears become accustomed to the constant throbbing and he is lost so to speak in tlie tumult of his own flight my flrst thought as i swung o ut over the hud son river was to . discover the direction of the various air currents s\tecess depended largely on the solution of this problem if i found the air to be cairn to a great height i intended to mark out my course at a high altitude if on the other hand the upper cu rrents proved treacherous i would take a lower route great was my satisfaction to fi nd that atmosphere wonderfully tranquil no more perfect a day could have been created i kept ris ing until i had lifted the machine to an altitude of at least 1,000 feet gradually i began to forget the mechanical workings of the air craft and to feel as if it were indeed a part of myself train follows air voyager the beauty of the scenery as it lay unfolded below inspired me with indescribable emotion on m y left bounding over the rails which were spun out along the shore of the hudson like two steel wires raced the railroad train which was to accompany me on my south , ward journey the locomotive an d cars seemed v to follow me like some devoted animal occasionally i could see the waving of a handkerchief from a car window these little signals afforded infinite encouragement i looked especially for some sign of recognition from the car in which was my wife and was gratified indeed when i thought i discerned her greet ing there did not appear to be many people abroad in the flrst stage of the journey on the river i could see fishing boats and a few pleas ure craft some of them standing still as if their occupants were com pletely absorbed in watching me i did not have any fear of a plunge into the water below for the reason that the aeroplane moved through the tranquil air with such stable feeling machine takes plunge in air indeed the aviator does not realize that he is in fact suspended in the air unless he meets with some current which causes his machine to plunge then the sensation is like that of a passenger in an elevator when it suddenly takes a drop it is not at all a pleasant feeling and one is prompted to right himself with all possible speed i experienced one fall shortly after passing linlithgo and sailed over the docks of germautown my attention had been distracted fiom the steering apparatus by the necessity to start the oil pumps thi3 1 did with my foot at the sum e timo neglecting m knitting as in the upper picture are mrs glenn curtiss and mr curtiss in his machine below is a diagram of the flight made by the aviator from albany to new york shovnng the progress of the great flight the lower picture shows curtiss risina for a flinht free season books forest park t'ut ont the canyon in next sunday's {___-Â§___ iner kr r ree rides on steam wrs united states and theodore ffoosevelt coupons in next sun day's examiner % free season books for % i white city l '.'. cut out ths coupon in % â€¢ next sunday's examiner ? s&&&s>&s <_*$.*_-_* $Â» $â– : g .;â– â– -â– -. :._-'._ 'â– >

Chicago examiner Chicago may 30 1910 14 pages monday registered la c is i'atent uslce monday vol viii no 137 a m pricf onf cfnt celivereg by canln 1 r_.i-.e uim r__i . i 30 can . a p j r mojrtk â– dr cook found in scotland going north for proofs preparing for trip to etah to . recover records cached there osbori declares to bring back eskimos insists he wiil face accusers with evidence ke alone reached the pole new y'i:;k may 29 the mystery of the whereabouts of dr frederick a cook was solved to-night he is in scotland pre paring for a trip to etah whence he plans to bring back his records of the discovery of the north pole and his instruments which are cached there he also intends to bring back the two eskimos who accompanied him on his dash to the pole and with them an interpreter in the person of the eskimo boy meue who recently returned to etah from new tori dr cook's objective point when he shall have recovered his records and instru ments will be copenhagen there he will ! submit his completed proofs to the scien tific body before whieli he appeared when he first returned from the far north after that he plans to return to new york to face his detractors and prove be yond doubt that he was not only the lirst but the only discoverer of the pole it is expected that he will reach copenhagen about octohec j and new york perhaps a month later oabon reveals plans the stanc-host supporter that dr cook has in new y'ork is captain bradley !_. os j lion of the arctic club of america nor man has been closer to tlie doctor sin-ce i the beginning of the now famous cook 1 peary controversy and he is one of the few ; men who has been in communication with the explorer since he disappeared ur cook is in great britain said cap tain osbon 1 cannot give his exact ad dress i firmly believe that he is noiv completing plans to start for etah to re cover his records and instruments i also believe that he will recover them and will take them straight to copenhagen the verdict of the university of copen hagen in dr cook's case was not proveur when he submits his records whieh will complete his proof that yerdict will un changed to proved beyond the shadow of a doubt i cannot tell how dr cook will go to etah because i don't know tliere are thiee ways open to him the first is by a whaling vessel from dundee scotland the second is by the danish government's trad ing ship from copenhagen this vessel goes only to upper navik and it is a long hard trip from there to etah if he can get the permission of ue danish government for the vessel to take him to etah that perhaps would lie the test way for him to l-o because on a danish vessel and under the auspices of the government there could be no suspicion attaching to the trip banker to pay expenses 1 think however that the third method i is tlie best there is a new york banker j a man of great wealth who stands ready j at any time to defray the expense of thel doctor's trip to etah this man is now in europe he is ready to put up the i money to charter a vessel and hi it out for the trip i have advised dr cook by letter not j â– to go for the records himself as to do so would give his enemies an opportunity to bay that he tampered with them after re covering them i want him to send a trustworthy committee to recover the rec . ords and instruments and to get the two eskimos this committee should go straight from etah to copenhagen and dr cook can meet them there if however he insists upon going in person he should take with hill scuuc men who will see that the rec ords are sealed as soon ns recovered and will be able to testify that they were not tampered with will leave in few weeks dr cook sliould leave foi etah within n few weeks i expect that he will arrive tliere about august 1 perhaps a little curlier and he should be back with the completed proofs before october l lie has been in great britain about six or seven weeks he was iu asuncion paraguay in the middle of march he weut from there to buenos ayres and sailed for southampton arriving tliere april 7 he has been in great britain ever since making his arrangements he knows all that has been going on not only has he been informed by letters fr.un new york but he has been supplied with newspaper clippings and is thorou < i ly posted no one is with him except his wife i am positive that early this fall dr cook will reappear with positive proof of his claims mme lina cavalieri lina cavalieri to go under knife in paris famous diva and fiancee of sheriff bob chanler is seriously 111 with appendicitis special gable to the examiner london may 2 a dispatch from paris says liua cavalieri who was about to leave paris for buenos ayres to fulfill an operatic engagement at a theater there is suffering from au attack of appendicitis and is unable to make the journey uutil after an operation has beeu performed mme cavalieri who is one of the world's famous singers a nd who has been in paris i jfor some time filling an engagement rg eently announced her jietrothal to former sheriff boh ( hni r . f new york her long deferred answer to his pr__>c__l to marry caused much comment when she accepted him by cable she later said she j would not marry in italy where there are no divorce laws though she further stated | she did not expect to and their use neces sary -'.__' w -â– â– - . â€¢ .-â– _ augustus n gage dead well known heal estate lawyer 111 bnt a few days augustus neander gage 57 years old pioneer resident of wilmette and a prom inent Chicago attorney died early yester day morning at his home 1210 greenwood avenue after a short illness mr gage was stricken while at his office tuesday thursday night he became worse and sat urday hope of his recovery was abandoned mr gage had been engaged iu the practice of law in ohicago for forty years he made a specialty of real estate law nnd handled many of the largest cases involv ing real estate deals in the loop district lie was one of the best known masons in the stale mr cage was lioru at gage's lake lake vouniy and studied law at washington d &s